Second Home
Deductions
Second Home
Interest Deductions
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IRS Topic 505 -
Interest Expense
Second Home Interest is
deductible
on mortgage loans of up to $1
million used to buy, construct or
substantially improve your second home
($500,000 if Married Filing Separately).
If you use your second home as a
residence and rent it for 15 days of the
year or more, you must report rental
income.
A second home can be a house,
condominium, cooperative, mobile home,
house trailer, RV or boat that has sleeping,
cooking and toilet facilities. If you own more than 2 homes, you
must choose which home other than your
main home to treat as the second home.
However, you don't have to choose the
same home each year.
Second Home Deductions
If you take out a mortgage to buy,
construct or substantially improve a
second home, the interest is deductible
if you itemize deductions. Your
deduction may be limited if the mortgage
exceeds the fair market value of the
home or if the mortgages on your main
home and your second home exceed $1
million ($500,000 if you're Married
Filing Separately). These limits do not
apply to mortgages taken out before Oct.
14, 1987 (called grandfathered debt),
but grandfathered debt reduces the $1
million and $500,000 limits.
If you take out a home equity loan or
line of credit on your second home, the
interest is fully deductible unless the
mortgage exceeds the fair market value
of the home reduced by the amount of the
mortgages, including grandfathered debt,
as previously described, or if the
mortgages of this type on your main home
and second home exceed $100,000 ($50,000
if Married Filing Separately).
Real estate taxes and points you pay
over the life of a mortgage to acquire a
second home are deductible if you
itemize deductions. Points you pay on a
mortgage to acquire a second home are
also deductible over the life of the
loan. If you refinance or sell the home
before the mortgage is paid off, you can
deduct in the year of sale or
refinancing any points you didn't
previously deduct.
Renting Your Second Home
If you use the home as a residence and
rent it for less than 15 days during the
year, you don't have to report the
rental income. It's considered a
residence if you (or a family member)
use the home for personal purposes for
more than the greater of 14 days or 10%
of the number of days that you rent the
home at fair rental value. You may not
deduct any expenses attributable to the
rental, but you may deduct interest and
taxes if you itemize your deductions.
If you use the home as a residence and
rent it for 15 days or more, you must
report the rental income. You may deduct
your interest and taxes as described
above. But you can deduct other rental
expenses (including depreciation) only
up to the amount of the income reduced
by the deductions for interest and
taxes. Any rental expenses not
deductible under this rule are carried
to the following year, when they are
again subject to this limit.
If you don't use the home as a
residence, the above rules don't apply.
You report your income and expenses in
the same manner as for other rental
property, and you can't deduct expenses
other than interest, taxes and casualty
losses attributable to your personal use
of the home.
Selling Your Second Home
If you sell your second home, the gain
will be taxed as capital gain, long-term
if you owned it for more than a year and
short-term if you owned it 1 year or
less. A loss on the sale can't be
deducted. If the second home was rented
for profit, gain generally is taxed as
capital gain and a loss can be deducted.
The part of the gain attributable to
depreciation is taxed at a maximum rate
of 25%. If you used the home for
personal purposes and rented it, you
have to treat the sale as part personal,
part business.
If the second home was your main home
for at least 2 years during the 5-year
period ending on the date of sale, you
can exclude up to $250,000 of the gain
(up to $500,000 if Married Filing
Jointly and you both used the home as
your main home for the required period).
You can't claim the exclusion if you
sold another home within the 2-year
period ending on the date of sale and
claimed the exclusion for that sale.
If you don't meet the 2-year ownership
or use requirement, you may claim the
exclusion only if you sell the home
because of a change in health, place of
employment, or another "unforeseen
circumstance." In this situation, the
maximum exclusion will be reduced. You
may not exclude any gain attributable to
depreciation you claimed after May 6,
1997.
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